Latin@ Left Project

For five hundred years, Latin@ peoples across political borders have struggled for independence, peace, justice, democracy, and for Mother Earth. Revolutionary change in the U.S. and beyond will require a strong Latin@ left, organizing for racial, language, national, and cultural justice within the U.S., and in support of and in conjunction with a renewed left in Latin American countries. Latin@s will comprise one third of the U.S. population within a generation; winning the next generation to socialism is an imperative. In order to contribute to the building of a strong, united, continental Latin@ left, we offer perspectives and analysis from a range of U.S. and Latin American leftists.

Latin@ Left Project

No categories

For five hundred years, Latin@ peoples across political borders have struggled for independence, peace, justice, democracy, and for Mother Earth. Revolutionary change in the U.S. and beyond will require a strong Latin@ left, organizing for racial, language, national, and cultural justice within the U.S., and in support of and in conjunction with a renewed left in Latin American countries. Latin@s will comprise one third of the U.S. population within a generation; winning the next generation to socialism is an imperative. In order to contribute to the building of a strong, united, continental Latin@ left, we offer perspectives and analysis from a range of U.S. and Latin American leftists.

History was made on December 1, 2018: progressive Andrés Manuel López Obrador, or AMLO, became President of México with 90% of the popular vote. His party, MORENA, originally a social movement and only 4 years old, won the majority of

What are the biggest challenges for Morena and for the party’s membership?
We must advance the social movement for political change to the left, away from corruption and toward a fair distribution of our national wealth.
Morena must become a

“If it was unacceptable for the Russians to interfere in the US elections, what could justify the encouragement of a coup by the USA?”
The United States government has never accepted the Bolivarian Revolutionary
process in Venezuela since the day

Bruce Hobson interviewed María Rosado, a young professional actress with a chemistry degree from the University of Puerto Rico, and a theater degree from Brown University, about the situation in her home country one year after the devastation wrought by

by Bill Gallegos
The US has never welcomed non-white, non-European immigrants. It was under President Obama that deportations reached an all-time high.
But today, the Trump Administration has made the demonization of migrants, particularly those from Mexico and Latin America,